Monthly Archives: October 2021

the 19th hole …

Toronto. Wow! It’s been over a year and a half and COVID is still with us. Our society has   avoided the FOURTH wave effect so far by resorting to very limited outdoor events plus using ZOOM. We found out that … Continue reading

Posted in activities | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on the 19th hole …

another one bites the dust

Toronto. We were sorry to hear that we lost another magazine recently. PetaPixel carried an article on February 12, 2021 by Jaron Schneider titled, “Canadian Magazine Photo Life Has Shipped its Final Issue“. Photo Life was around for many years … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on another one bites the dust

Canadian Photography magazine

Toronto. Do you remember Canadian Photography magazine? It was a skinny magazine that survived for a few years around the 1970s against the thick American magazines which had a far greater range of advertisers available plus lots of writing talent. … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Canadian Photography magazine

Generation Homeless – October PHSC Talk

Toronto. Toronto-based filmmaker Jason S. Cipparrone pursues the emotional truths behind living on the streets in Toronto. He has worked with the city’s homeless during the COVID-19 pandemic to document and reveal their stories. Join us on October 20th, 2021 … Continue reading

Posted in program | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Generation Homeless – October PHSC Talk

aunt Tilly’s camera collection

  Toronto. Back in the 1980s, Don Douglas and I put on a dog and pony show to represent the PHSC. I did a slide show on milestones in the history of B&W photography up to the roll film era, … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on aunt Tilly’s camera collection

how to make good pictures in 1936

Toronto. 1936, what a great year! Mind you, I wasn’t around back then, but my dad upgraded his picture taking skills to a Kodak Junior Six-20. Kodak had reached the pinnacle of the photographic industry by mid last century – … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on how to make good pictures in 1936

something else we no longer need …

Toronto. Photographs taken with any metal/glass/film based positive process have to be retaken or duplicated to make an added copies. Those of us who embraced the digital era have no need for such things – the digital process creates a … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on something else we no longer need …

through the wet-plate camera

Toronto. Being a photographer – and a good one – in the mid 1800s took exceptional skill and a fine, artistic eye. Author Lewis Carroll (A.K.A. the reverend Chas. Dodgson) was one such person. In Bruce Downes’s column (Let’s Talk … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on through the wet-plate camera

dating those tiny Photomatic photos

Toronto. You can pick these little portraits up at one of our events. Nowadays, photo booths give us a few portraits in a short strip of prints. Sean Nolan has taken the time to date the Photomatic portraits using the … Continue reading

Posted in photos | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on dating those tiny Photomatic photos

introducing a photographer to minicams in 1938

Toronto. When Leitz announced the Leica mid 1920s, most photographers used larger cameras and rarely needed to enlarge their negatives. In 1926, the German government arranged for Zeiss to form the mighty Zeiss-Ikon conglomerate in Dresden to rationalize the German … Continue reading

Posted in history | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on introducing a photographer to minicams in 1938